Death risk higher from UK virus variant; vaccine in pregnancy may
protect newborns
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[February 09, 2021]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - The following is a roundup of
some of the latest scientific studies on the novel coronavirus and
efforts to find treatments and vaccines for COVID-19, the illness caused
by the virus.
UK variant carries higher death risk
The coronavirus variant first identified in the UK is deadlier than
earlier variants, a new study confirms. Researchers tracked roughly one
million individuals tested for COVID-19 from November to January in
community settings, including about 3,000 who ultimately died from it.
After accounting for other factors that affect COVID-19 outcomes,
patients with the new variant had a roughly 35% higher risk of death,
they reported on Wednesday on medRxiv ahead of peer review. Among male
patients ages 55-69, around 1-in-180 died after becoming infected with
older versions of the virus. With the new variant "that's gone up to
around ... 1-in-140," said co-author Nicholas Davies of the London
School of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene. The absolute risk of death
remains low under age 54, his team said. For women ages 70-84, the risk
of death within 28 days went from 2.9% with the original variant to 3.7%
with the new UK variant, and for those age 85 and older it went from
12.8% to 16.4%. For males ages 70-84, the mortality rate rose from 4.7%
to 6.1% and for older males from 17.1% to 21.7%. The researchers did not
have data on people who were diagnosed in hospitals or on infected
people who were never tested. Davies said his team is updating its
analysis with more data, "and it looks like the increase in mortality
may well be higher than 35%."
COVID-19 vaccine in pregnancy may protect newborns
COVID-19 vaccines given to pregnant women may help protect their
newborns, a case report suggests. Florida doctors described a frontline
healthcare worker who received the first dose of the Moderna vaccine
three weeks before going into labor. Her healthy baby girl had so-called
IgG antibodies to the new coronavirus in her umbilical cord blood.
Finding these antibodies in the baby after a single dose of the vaccine
suggests "there is potential for protection and infection risk reduction
from ... maternal vaccination," the doctors said in a paper posted on
Friday on medRxiv ahead of peer review. The ideal timing of vaccination
during pregnancy is not clear, they said, nor is it clear how well these
antibodies will protect the infant, or for how long. U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention guidelines say that because only limited
data are available on the safety of COVID-19 vaccination during
pregnancy, "getting vaccinated is a personal choice for people who are
pregnant."
Semen quality may be impaired after COVID-19
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A man wearing a protective face mask walks past an illustration of a
virus outside a regional science centre, as the city and surrounding
areas face local restrictions in an effort to avoid a local lockdown
being forced upon the region, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, in Oldham, Britain August 3, 2020. REUTERS/Phil
Noble
Young, sexually active men who recover from COVID-19 may be at risk
for fertility problems, a small study from Italy suggests. Doctors
who analyzed semen samples from 43 such men found that in 25%, the
semen was nearly or completely devoid of sperm. A complete absence
of sperm, or azoospermia, was "highly related to the severity of the
illness: the condition was found in four out of five patients
admitted to the intensive care unit," researchers reported in the
journal Human Reproduction. While most of the men had fathered
children, a few reported previous problems having a baby with a
long-term partner, and the researchers acknowledge that they did not
have any pre-COVID-19 semen samples for comparison purposes. Still,
the researchers said their finding that one-in-four men who
recovered from COVID-19 had little or no sperm in their semen
suggests that "an assessment of semen quality should be recommended
for men of reproductive age who are affected by COVID-19."
New clues discovered to ICU patients' breathing problems
The lungs of COVID-19 patients in intensive care units can lack
"surfactant," a substance crucial to breathing that helps oxygen in
the air sacs of the lungs get transferred into blood. Researchers
believe they now have new clues to explain why that occurs. The
coronavirus somehow triggers the immune system to mistakenly attack
surfactant-producing cells, they reported on Sunday on medRxiv ahead
of peer review. In lab experiments, they exposed healthy human lung
tissue to plasma from COVID-19 patients. So-called IgA antibodies in
the plasma attacked surfactant-producing lung cells called
pneumocytes, although that was only true for plasma from critically
ill patients. In autopsies of deceased COVID-19 patients, the
researchers found "remarkably reduced" levels of surfactant in the
lungs. Other research teams have been planning trials to see if
treatment with artificial surfactant - a mixture of lipids and
proteins that can be helpful in premature infants - will help ease
breathing problems in severely ill COVID-19 patients. The authors of
the new report say further study is also needed to see whether
treatment with immunosuppressive medications might be another way to
protect surfactant-producing proteins.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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